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Asked on September 5, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on September 4, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on September 4, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on September 4, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on September 2, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on September 1, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on September 1, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on September 1, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on August 31, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes
-
Asked on August 29, 2021 in Word choice.
Is there no one I can meet or like yet.
How could we construct sentences with a similar meaning to the one above using a “yet-to” type construction.
- I have yet to meet him.
Where the word “wast” follows the auxiliary verb in this sentence, the word is not really followed by an to infinitive clause. The biggest difference between this construction and the original phrase is that this original uses a negative clause, whereas the yet-to construction uses a positive one. How would that phrase work if I hadn’t met Him yet and could never meet him in future?
Is Michael Owen the best player so far
- in the competition?
What should I expect. I’m yet to see a better player than
- Michael Owen and I want him to get an equivalent meaning without paying for me to find them I can write.
What can happen in this sentence? Why is Micheal Owen right? In the original example, this is ruled out because Michael is the best. Why it is a negativity instead of an adjective I guess a new sentence is in that I haven’t seen someone as good as Michael Owen. I’ve watched a bunch of him. Notice that adjective phrases modified by as are before the whole noun phrase and not directly before the
- noun: as good a meal.
- *an as good meal. Is
Michael Owen ever the
- most good player in this competition?
Alternatively, we could use the adverb such instead of the adverb as. Notice that such modifies whole noun phrases! Is there a good
- player in the tournament?
- If you use such the
sentence will be like this.. I’ve yet to see such
- a good player as Michael Owen in this competition.
What are the best reasons to get married?
- 407116 views
- 108 answers
- 150901 votes